We have no meanings for "deprive a man" in our records yet.
1 You must not deprive a man of his liberty.
2 He wouldn't deprive a man of his rights.
3 Don't deprive a man of his inheritance!
4 But it is unlawful to deprive a man of his soul by killing him, except by public authority.
5 Almost everything conspires to deprive a man brought up to command others of the principles of reason and justice.
6 By the operation of this law, the President can deprive a man of office without taking the responsibility of removing him.
7 The lesson was clear: deprive a man of his humanity, and be prepared for the consequences: a human being capable of God knows what.
8 Just in the same way, sixty years ago, it was thought ludicrously impossible to deprive a man of his right to whip his slave.
9 Theft may be called an attempt to permanently deprive a man of his property, which is punished with the same severity whether successful or not.
10 For excommunication deprives a man chiefly of a share in the sacraments.
11 One prison camp was like another in this sense, that it deprived a man of his liberty.
12 Indignation generally deprives a man of self-possession, but on this occasion it restored that of the embarrassed lover.
13 2: Further, murder is a sin because it deprives a man of life.
14 "Poverty," says Ben Franklin, "often deprives a man of all spirit and virtue.
15 By depriving a man of his wickedness-moreparticularly nowadays-therefore, one may unwittingly be doing violence to the greatest in him.
16 It was an unheard-of thing, he said, depriving a man of his confidential secretary without so much as asking his leave.
Other examples for "deprive a man"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: